Any ideas on how to figure out a topic for a law review note? I'm supposed to write a 25-30 pages note on a unique topic next semester, and the law review board said I should start thinking about a topic now. But I have no idea what I would even want to write on. Thoughts? Thanks for your help

Did you do any writing for your summer gigs? I spent a month researching for a death penalty case and while its not the most fascinating thing, I already have summary memos and plenty of cases/secondary sources/etc that will save me a ton of time in research.

Just for efficiency and to maximize my free time, I highly recommend choosing something you've already done at least some work on.

To write you need to read widely. So start reading long form articles; not just law review articles, but think the New Yorker, Atlantic, Harpers, New York Times magazine and whatever the conservative equivalent of those are. There will be articles in there that discuss policy and law that raise issues that should tickle your fancy.

Another good idea is to pitch writing a paper in lieu of a final in one of your fall classes. I basically got a free A, three credits, and the opportunity to not worry an exam, all while knocking out your note. Topic is dictated by the course, and the professor will usually help you since they'd be serving as the faculty advisor on the note.

This is unconventional, but one idea is to go to reddit's legal advice sub and look through people's legal questions there. People often ask questions about very unique situations you never would have thought of...it could jog your brain on unique legal topics that haven't been written much about and have little risk of preemption.

Thanks for all of the feedback, I really appreciate it. I actually narrowed down to a general topic in criminal law, and even a more specific legal question regarding the Fourth Amendment. But now I'm trying to figure out whether it is pre-empted, how to add my own spin, etc.